Dozens killed in Yemen suicide blast

A suicide bombing in the southern Yemeni city of Jaar on Saturday killed 45 people and injured many more, local officials said. The attack is being blamed on al Qaeda after the army took control of the town from al Qaeda militants in June.

AFP - A suicide bombing in south Yemen blamed on Al-Qaeda killed 45 people, local officials said on Sunday, as residents voiced fears that a lack of security personnel on the ground will allow the jihadists to return.

In the east of the country, meanwhile, a suspected US drone strike late on Saturday killed five Al-Qaeda militants, a local official said.

The bomber struck on Saturday in Jaar, one of a string of towns in Abyan province that were retaken by government troops in June after being held by Al-Qaeda loyalists for more than a year.

"An Al-Qaeda suicide bomber detonated his explosives belt during a mourning ceremony organised by the Popular Resistance Committees," a local militia that fought alongside the army, said provincial governor Jamal al-Aqal.

"Bodies were flying in all directions because the explosion was so powerful," a witness said.

An official at Razi hospital in Jaar said it received the bodies of 24 of those killed, while medics said 12 people had died of their wounds in three hospitals in the main southern city Aden.

Relatives took the bodies of six of the dead directly from the scene of the attack for burial, local official Mohsen bin Jamila told AFP.

Later on Sunday, Jamila told AFP that "three of the wounded have succumbed to their wounds," raising the overall death toll to 45.

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The deputy head of Jaar's municipal authority held the government at least partially responsible for the attack because of its slowness in deploying police to the town after its recapture by the army.

"There is no presence of police in Jaar and other towns of Abyan, while Al-Qaeda militants remain underground," said Nasser Abdullah Mansari.

On Wednesday, an attack by Al-Qaeda militants on a police station in Jaar killed four soldiers and a civilian. Residents have expressed fears that the jihadists could retake the town.

The suspected US drone strike came near the village of Al-Qotn in Hadramawt province, another region where Al-Qaeda has been active.

"A drone fired two missiles at an all-terrain vehicle...killing its five occupants, all members of Al-Qaeda," a local official said, requesting anonymity.

Security forces sealed off the scene of the strike, witnesses said.

The United States is the only country that has drones in the region and in recent months has stepped up its strikes on Al-Qaeda targets in the south and east of Yemen.

Washington regards the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula as the most effective branch of the global jihadist network.

Al-Qaeda loyalists have carried out a spate of deadly attacks against Yemeni security forces and their militia allies since President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi came to power earlier this year pledging to crush the militants.

Al-Qaeda had taken advantage of a nearly year-long uprising against Hadi's predecessor, veteran strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh, to seize large swathes of the south and east.

In July, Yemen announced it had placed its security services on high alert to prevent "terrorist" attacks after it uncovered a plot to launch assaults against security and military checkpoints.